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History Lessons

Reading Like a Historian

The Reading Like a Historian curriculum engages students in historical inquiry. Each lesson revolves around a central historical question and features a set of primary documents designed for groups of students with a range of reading skills.

This curriculum teaches students how to investigate historical questions by employing reading strategies such as sourcing, contextualizing, corroborating, and close reading. Instead of memorizing historical facts, students evaluate the trustworthiness of multiple perspectives on historical issues and learn to make historical claims backed by documentary evidence. To learn more about how to use Reading Like a Historian lessons, watch these videos about how teachers use these materials in their classrooms.

Click here for a complete list of Reading Like a Historian lessons, and click here for a complete list of materials available in Spanish.

Topic

  • (-) U.S. History (34)
  • World History (17)

Time Period

  • Colonial Era (9)
  • Revolutionary War and Early U.S. (11)
  • Slavery and Expansion (10)
  • Civil War and Reconstruction (9)
  • The Gilded Age (9)
  • American Imperialism (4)
  • (-) Progressive Era (11)
  • World War I and the 1920s (14)
  • The New Deal and World War II (12)
  • Cold War (7)
  • (-) Civil Rights Era and Cold War Culture (17)
  • (-) Late 1900s and Early 2000s (7)
Image: Air Force bombing of the Chilean presidential palace on September 11, 1973. From the Wikimedia Commons.

1973 Chile Coup

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Image: Photo of Secretary of Interior Harold Ickes and delegates of the Confederated Tribes of the Flathead Indian Reservation in 1935.

Tribal Land Policies

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Image: Photograph of Sojourner Truth taken taken 1864. From the Library of Congress.

Background on Woman Suffrage

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Image: Photo of street children in "sleeping quarters" taken by Jacob Riis in 1890. From the Library of Congress.

Jacob Riis

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Portrait of Du Bois

Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. Du Bois

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Image: Issue of The Liberator from June 1901. From the J. L. Edmonds Project, accessed from the Internet Archive.

The Liberator and the Black Press

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Image: 1915 Political cartoon showing political boss conducting anti-suffragette, sweat shop owner, child labor employer, and others. From the Library of Congress.

Political Bosses

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Image: Photo of Japanese men in California published by Bain News Service in 1913. From the Library of Congress.

Japanese Segregation in San Francisco

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Child Labor image

Child Labor

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Pagination

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